nominally 455 grams
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The mass of water is 1g per cm3
because when it contain water the mass of water will be the one to be obtained
No
okk first find like a tube thingy and find the mass of it on the balance and write it down somewhere then put the water in the tubee and find the mass and write it downn when your donee subtract the mass of the tube from the mass of the tube with water in it and your answerr is the mass of the water ***make sure the tube has no water in it or ANYTHING because it could change the mass okk first find like a tube thingy and find the mass of it on the balance and write it down somewhere then put the water in the tubee and find the mass and write it downn when your donee subtract the mass of the tube from the mass of the tube with water in it and your answerr is the mass of the water ***make sure the tube has no water in it or ANYTHING because it could change the mass
You can change the mass of water in two ways: increase or decrease the amount of water or change the isotopic composition of the molecules of water. The first will have no effect on the mass of 1 cc of water. The second will. If you replace the hydrogen atoms in the "normal" water molecules with deuterium atoms you will increase the density (mass/cc) of the water.